The defendant George T. Rand, Sr., appeals under G. L. c. 278, § § 33A-33G, from convictions on indictments for manslaughter, and for leaving the scene of an accident after causing personal injuries. The defendant assigns as error: (1) the failure to suppress evidence which the police gathered as a result of an alleged illegal search and seizure of an automobile which the defendant was operating at the time of his arrest for an unrelated offence; (2) the judge’s denial of his motions for directed verdicts; and (3) the judge’s denial of his motions for a new trial.
From the pre-trial hearing on the motions to suppress, the following evidence pertinent to the first assignment of error appears: On January 29, 1970, at 7:40 P.M. two Weymouth police officers investigated a hit-and-run accident on Washington Street in Weymouth. They found the victim, Miss Janice McDermott, “lying in the road . . .. There were no apparent signs of life.” The victim’s girl friend told Officer DiLorenzo and Registry Inspector MacDonald that she and the victim had been walking along the side of the street with “the McDermott girl being further into the road, approximately two feet” from the road’s edge. The girl friend recalled “hearing a crashing sound and seeing . . . [Janice] being carried down the road on the front portion of the vehicle ... a late model Chevrolet or Pontiac, possibly white.”
At 10:50 P.M. that same evening, Officers DiLorenzo and MacDonald investigated a two car collision in which the defendant was involved. The defendant was arrested at that time on charges, stemming from this two car col
In light of these observations, the police towed the vehicle to the police station to examine the car more closely in reference to the hit-and-run accident. Relying entirely on an exterior examination of the vehicle, the police found after an hour’s investigation an earring, retaining clip, clothing fibers, and fiber impressions (paint samples were also taken), all of which tended to establish the vehicle as the hit-and-run automobile. After this examination was completed, the defendant was charged with manslaughter, leaving the scene after causing personal injuries and operating to endanger. The defendant contends there was error in the denial of his pre-trial motions to suppress all of this evidence,on the ground that it was the product of an illegal search and seizure. We disagree.
1. The police had no warrant to search the vehicle and the Commonwealth conceded in argument before this court that the examination of the vehicle at the police station was not incidental to the defendant’s initial arrest for charges stemming from an incident, namely the second accident, unrelated to the search. “Thus narrowed, our consideration must focus on whether there were exigent circumstances which permitted . . . [the police]
The Commonwealth contends that there was no search of the vehicle at the police station because the police restricted their observations to what was in plain sight. However, the United States Supreme Court has indicated repeatedly that the fact that evidence is in plain view is not by itself legally significant. “It is well established that under certain circumstances the police may seize evidence in plain view without a warrant. But it is important to keep in mind that, in the vast majority of cases,
any
evidence seized by the police will be in plain view, at least at the moment of seizure. The problem with the ‘plain view’ doctrine has been to identify the circumstances in which plain view has legal significance rather than by being simply the normal concomitant of any search, legal or illegal. . . . What the ‘plain view’ cases have in common is that the police officer in each of them had a prior justification for an intrusion in the course of which he came
inadvertently
(emphasis supplied) across a piece of evidence incriminating the accused.”
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire,
The facts of the instant case indicate that the police made some initial observations of the defendant’s vehicle at the scene of the two car collision which aroused their suspicions about the vehicle’s possible involvement in the hit and run. If the police had seized any evidence at that time which was in plain sight, the “plain view” doctrine would justify the seizure because the police had a prior justification for their intrusion, namely the two car collision and the defendant’s arrest in the course of which they had inadvertently come across a piece of incriminating evidence.
However, in the instant case, some of the incriminating evidence
1
(e.g., earring, retaining clip, fiber im
However, the Supreme Court’s decision in
Chambers
v.
Maroney,
The Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in the
Coolidge
case,
supra,
indicated “that the Justices of the United States Supreme Court were in seemingly irreconcilable disarray as to what the law was or ought to be with reference to the warrantless search of an automobile.”
Commonwealth
v.
Haefeli, supra,
at 278. However, all of the Supreme Court Justices agreed that the
Chambers
case supported at the very least the proposition that
“given
a justified initial intrusion, there is little difference between a search on the open highway and a later search at the station.”
Coolidge
v.
New Hampshire, supra,
at 463, fn. 20. Moreover, the majority opinion in the
Coolidge
case conceded that in determining whether the initial intrusion by the police was justified by exigent circumstances as well as probable cause to search, the proper test was to examine the exigent circumstances at the time the car was stopped and not at the time the car was actually searched at the police station. “It is true that the actual search of the automobile in
Chambers
was made at the police station many hours after the car had been stopped on the highway, when the car was no longer movable, any ‘exigent circumstances’ had passed, and, for all the record shows, there was a magistrate easily available.”
Id.
at 463, fn. 20. Thus, the proper test is whether, at the time a car was stopped, there was probable cause to search the vehicle and there were exigent circumstances such as “the fleeting opportunity to search” justifying an immediate search at that time.
“Chambers . . .
held only that, where the police may stop and search an automo
Unlike the situation in the Coolidge case where the police “had known for some time of the probable role of the Pontiac car in the crime” and had ample opportunity to get a search warrant before the night of the defendant’s arrest, 3 the police in the instant case, as in the Chambers, Carroll, and Haefeli cases, supra, had no opportunity prior to the initial stopping of the vehicle to obtain a search warrant.
In the instant case, probable cause to search for evidence connecting the car to the hit-and-run accident resulted inadvertently from the police’s legitimate investigation of the damage caused by the two car collision for which the defendant had been arrested. The automobile’s color, its location, and the nature and extent of the damage to its front end came into the officers’ plain view through inadvertence in the course of routine police work.
Commonwealth
v.
Ross,
361 Mass, at 681-682.
Westover
v.
United States,
As in the
Chambers
and
Haefeli
cases, the vehicle was stopped on a public highway at the time probable cause to search it first arose. Moreover, the police were dealing with a vehicle of unascertained ownership that could have been moved out of the jurisdiction at the owner’s direction.
4
See
Commonwealth v. Haefeli,
at 282-283. Therefore, we are of the opinion that there
2. The defendant’s second assignment of error concerns the judge’s denial of his motions for directed verdicts on both indictments. The defendant concedes that there was sufficient evidence to warrant a finding that he had possession of the automobile prior to the hit-and-run accident. But he contends that the circumstantial evidence introduced by the Commonwealth to show that he was the driver of the vehicle at the time it struck the victim was insufficient to warrant submission to the jury because it was based on vague conjecture and speculation that could not possibly “produce a moral certainty of guilt, and . . . exclude any other reasonable hypothesis.”
Commonwealth
v.
Russ,
Our holding in the
Shea
case (relied on by the defendant) that a directed verdict should have been granted for the defendant was based on the fact that the Commonwealth failed to introduce
any
evidence placing the defendant in the hit-and-run vehicle on the date of the offence either before or after the accident. Moreover, there was evidence in that case that another unknown person had been seen operating the vehicle less than three hours before the accident. This court concluded that “‘. . . [a] careful examination of the record discloses nothing more than speculation, conjecture or surmise upon which such a [guilty] finding could be based. This is insufficient to sustain the burden resting upon the Commonwealth.’
Commonwealth
v.
Albert,
The defendant argues that even if there were sufficient evidence to prove he was the operator of the hit-and-run vehicle, his motion for a directed verdict on the manslaughter charge should have been granted because there was insufficient evidence to warrant a finding that his conduct was wanton and reckless. We disagree. See
Commonwealth v. Welansky,
We think the evidence supports a finding that the defendant could have seen the victim for a substantial distance before the impact and that he failed to slow down, turn toward the open road, or even sound a warning signal. Testimony by investigating police • officers indicated that visibility conditions were good
5
as the
3. The defendant argues on his motions for a new trial, that his conviction on the charge of manslaughter should not be allowed to stand because it is legally inconsistent with his acquittal on the charge of operating a motor vehicle so as to endanger the public. Since the lesser crime of driving to endanger, G. L. c. 90, § 24 (2) (a), only requires proof of ordinary negligence, whereas manslaughter requires proof of reckless and wanton conduct,
Commonwealth
v.
Welansky,
However, our examination of the judge’s instructions, to which the defendant did not object, leads us to conclude that these verdicts were not inconsistent. The instructions
7
suggested to the jury that operating so as to
Thus, we are faced with a situation like that in
Commonwealth
v.
Peach,
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The dent on the vehicle’s front end and the “piece of string” dangling over one of the headlights were in plain view. See
Commonwealth
v.
LaBossiere,
The Supreme Court was careful to point out that the original justification for the seizure of evidence in plain view cannot be extended to support such a deliberate general exploratory search. “Of course, the extension of the original justification is legitimate
only where it is immediately apparent
to the police that they have evidence before them; the ‘plain view’ doctrine may not be used to extend a general exploratory search from one object to another until something incriminating at last emerges” (emphasis supplied). The
Coolidge
case,
supra,
at 466. See
Commonwealth
v.
Wojcilc,
“Since the police knew of the presence of the automobile and planned all along to seize it, there . . . [were] no ‘exigent cireumstanee[s]’ to justify their failure to obtain a warrant.” Id. at 478.
The defendant had borrowed the automobile from its owner.
Officer DiLorenzo testified that as he drove toward the accident scene in the northbound lane, he could see two automobiles parked by the victim’s body from a distance of 400 feet.
The jury had other evidence of the defendant’s reckless conduct before them. The defendant had two drinks a few hours before the accident and was seen driving without headlights past the scene of the accident one-half hour after it occurred. There was no evidence of tire marks at the scene of the hit-and-run accident to indicate that the operator had tried to avoid the accident by using his brakes or swerving toward the open road. Further evidence is found in the damage to the front end of the car and the driver’s failure to stop after hitting the victim.
“Now, in relation to the offenses charged and taking them in the category of their seriousness, there is the offense charged of driving on a public way negligently so that the lives and safety of the public might be endangered. . . . [I]f the operation of the car was negligently performed, he can be found guilty of this charge. “If otherwise you find, he is to be found not guilty” (emphasis supplied).
On the charge to the jury on manslaughter, the judge noted that it was a more serious crime which the prosecution must establish by proof of a “death caused by wanton or reckless conduct. The distinction here is the proof of wanton and reckless conduct as distinguished from ordinary negligence. The mere showing of ordinary negligence is not enough to prove criminal liability.”
The correctness of such instructions is not before us. Since there were no objections to them, they constituted the law of the case.
